Saturday, September 27, 2014

Surrender Out of Love

My friend cringed when he heard that the
final instruction of the Bhagavad-gita is to surrender to Krishna
wholeheartedly. "Am I a criminal that I should surrender to Him? Better
worship a God who is more humble and down-to-earth!"

The word surrender does not usually conjure
good images in our mind. As the dictionary confirms, surrender is associated
with defeat and despair, and loss of pride and prestige. When an army
surrenders to the enemy, it brings disgrace to the nation. A criminal or a
terrorist is forced to surrender because he is a nuisance to the society. In
this world we find that the winner becomes arrogant and want to humiliate the
loser by forcing him to surrender, while the loser is seeking an opportunity to
take revenge and settle scores.

But the surrender that Krishna demands in
the Gita is far different from the forced surrender of a loser in life.
Selective reading of the Bhagavad-Gita may make us think that Krishna is an
egoistic God. Certain verses may sound like the speech of a politician, who
while campaigning for election promises the voters to eradicate all sufferings
of the people if voted to power. But Krishna is not a political leader that He
wants to increase His number of followers. His call for surrender is not driven
by egoistic claims of supremacy; it is actually impelled by His supreme
compassion for all living entities.

Panacea for all sufferings

Krishna' s Godhood does not need our
backing as proof. All the Vedic literatures unequivocally declare that Krishna
is the supreme. Here are some examples: isvarahparamah Krishna – "Krishna
who is known as Govinda is the Supreme Godhead" (Brahma-samhita 5.1);
Krishna tubhagavansvayam – "Lord Sri Krishna is the original Personality
of Godhead" (Bhagavatam 1.3.38). "Devaki's son [Krishna] is the
Supreme Lord" [Narayana Upanisad (4)]. Even Krishna Himself declares
explicitly about His supreme position:
mattahparataramnanyatkincidastidhananjaya – "0 conqueror of wealth, there
is no truth superior to Me" (Bhagavad-Gita 7.7).

Surrender to Krishna is a beautiful experience
and the most wonderful concept in all of creation. It means to genuinely offer
our love to Him. Those who are unwilling to surrender to Krishna with love have
to surrender to Him at the time of death. Old age, disease and death are the
weapons by which powerful time strangulates us. All great emperors of the world
– Alexander, Napolean, Hitler, Aurangzeb – have been swept away into oblivion
by the force of time. To the degree we consider ourselves the controller and
proprietor of things of this world, to that degree we suffer when we face
Krishna in the form of death. That surrender is too painful and immensely
horrible.

On
the other hand, if we understand our eternal position as the servant of Krishna
and humbly accept it, all our miseries will cease to exist. Krishna immediately
takes the devotee under His tutelage.

If we take one step towards Krishna, He
takes hundreds of steps towards us. Krishna wants us to be happy and is always
ready to shower His love upon us. He promises: "Abandon all varieties of
religion and just surrender unto Me. I shall deliver you from all sinful
reactions. Do not fear." Bhagavad-Gita (18.66)

Krishna the humblest waiting for us

I wish my friend understood how God,
although the greatest person, is simultaneously the most humble. Imagine an
employee who works for a multi-millionaire becomes inimical towards his boss
and starts disobeying and demeaning him. Will the boss tolerate him?

Strangely Krishna does so; He allows the
rebellious souls to rebel against Him, and creates the material world for them,
so they can satisfy their gratuitous desires. Krishna tolerates all and
patiently waits for the moment these souls will realize their folly and turn
towards Him.

Krishna' s pastimes with His devotees
clearly reveal His humility. One time His childhood friend Sudama came to visit
Him in Dvaraka, being very poor, Sudama was not dressed properly.His clothes
were torn and dirty, and he was emaciated. When Lord Krishna came to know that
his friend Sudama has arrived, He immediately rushed out of His palace to
receive His friend. He embraced Sudama and made him sit on His own bedstead. He
washed Sudama's feet and personally offered him fruits and drinks.

Although Krishna belonged to the royal Yadava
family, He never forgot His poor brahmana friend. He treated Sudama as His
equal.

Krishna is famous as the charioteer of
Arjuna on the Battlefield of Kurukshetra, He didn't mind taking such a humble
position for His devotee although He was God Himself.

Thus we see that the supreme proprietor,
creator and master of the entire cosmic manifestation is eager to serve His
devotees and take a secondary role. We rarely find such examples in the history
of the world.

In spite of our brazenness Krishna is ready
to accept us again and fervently hopes that one day we will return back to the
spiritual world, our original home.

The Wonder of Surrender

My friend abhors the word surrender because
he thinks he is not a criminal. But as lawbreakers of the spiritual world, we
too have acted criminally. Fortunately Lord Krishna is merciful toward us and
eagerly wants us to return back to Him.

Surrendering to Krishna, our original
father, does not bring us any dishonor. Our surrender to Krishna is like a
patient submitting himself to a doctor for treatment or a child taking shelter
of his mother. A patient agrees to abide by the prescription of the doctor for
his own benefit; a child experiences love and care on the lap of his mother.
Krishna' s clarion call to surrender is for our salvation.

Not
everyone surrenders; Krishna understands this: "After many births and
deaths, he who is actually in knowledge surrenders unto Me, knowing Me to be
the cause of all causes and all that is. Such a great soul is very rare." (Bhagavad-gita
7.19) If we are not with Krishna, we are undoubtedly with maya, Krishna' s
material illusory energy. So either to Krishna or to His material energy, we
must surrender. In fact every day, knowingly or unknowingly, we surrender to
the dictum of our mind and senses, to our insatiable desires, to the demands of
our bodies, to our lower self, to so many people in our daily life. My poor
friend is a heavy smoker, smoking half a dozen cigarettes daily. He hardly
realizes that he has surrendered his life to a life-threatening addiction.

Arjuna was in acute anxiety before the
Mahabharata war began, but after hearing Krishna' s message he completely
surrendered to Krishna and thus paved the way for his glorious victory.

Arjuna said: "My dear Krishna, 0
infallible one, my illusion is now gone. I have regained my memory by Your
mercy. I am now firm and free from doubt and am prepared to act according to
Your instructions.(Bhagavad-gita 18.73). Like Arjuna, there are many examples
in history who achieved incredible fame and glory just by following Krishna' s
instructions and the instructions of His devotees. By surrendering to Krishna
success is certain in our life; there will be no room for anxieties and
miseries.

Surrendering to Krishna opens the door for a
blissful and eternal life. "For those who have accepted the boat of the
lotus feet of the Lord, who is the shelter of the cosmic manifestation and is
famous as Murari, the enemy of the Mura demon, the ocean of the material world
is like the water contained in a calf's hoof-print. Their goal is param padam,
Vaikuntha, the place where there are no material miseries, not the place where
there is danger at every step." (Srimad-Bhagavatam 10.14.58)"